This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A12470 | Why we came armed in that sort, séeing hée was our friend, and had neither bowes nor arrowes, what did wée doubt? |
A35692 | Now to conclude, its possible some may say, what needs a Rela ● ion of a place o ● so long standing as N ● w Yo ● k hath been? |
A85806 | Is, how it hath been hindred, and what is the let in the growth of it? |
A85806 | The fifth Question Is, Whether there may not be a course taken to quicken the trade and Commerce of the English Nation? |
A46303 | And why may not this be the Bark the Jesuits Powder was made of, that was so Famous not long since in England, for Agues? |
A84357 | Afterward I heard that Word of God to Moses, I''le be with thy mouth, for who maketh the seeing Eye, or hearing Ear, is it not I? |
A84357 | Christ answered, Why do ye make void the Commandements of God? |
A84357 | Hearing you teach that Word that the Scribes and Pharisees said Why do thy Disciples break the Tradition of the Fathers? |
A84357 | I asked him what their end was in keeping such a day? |
A84357 | That if a Pawwaw had his Imps gone from him, what he should have instead of them to preserve him? |
A84357 | Then again I much remembred my sins: and again I thought, What will become of me, if I die in my sins? |
A84357 | Then one of the Elders asked, if I took him off, or whether had he finished? |
A84357 | When you ask me, Why do I love God? |
A84357 | last? |
A84357 | why do you not do according to it? |
A07832 | :[ 1637?] |
A07832 | But what was the issue? |
A07832 | Facilis descensus averni: the booke of common prayer sayd they what poore thinge is that, for a man to reade in a booke? |
A07832 | For the smooke of their fire, to assend and passe through? |
A07832 | Is it Lu ● acy; Or Doteage on his owne Imagery? |
A07832 | The agent wondring to see that his gold would doe no good, did aske, the cunning man if hee could give him no advise? |
A07832 | The old Sachem Papasiquineo having this message returned, was inraged? |
A07832 | The wise man sayes, give mee neither riches nor poverty; why? |
A07832 | The word which was given with an alarme, was, o he''s gon, he''s gon, what shall wee doe he''s gon? |
A07832 | WHat ailes Pigmalion? |
A07832 | a coat? |
A07832 | what''s this? |
A07832 | who said, hee would: and what was that thinke you? |
A05339 | ALmighty God, shewing a true Mothers duty, saith by the Prophet Esay: Can a woman forget her child, and not haue compassion on the Sonne of her wombe? |
A05339 | And I hauing had that good happe to be acquainted with him some yeeres before, asked mee if I would take part in that businesse? |
A05339 | And if one feareth the enemy, how shall he that husbandeth the land, or otherwise busie in necessarie affaires, saue himselfe if he be pursued? |
A05339 | And then I asked him, seeing that they beleeue in one onely God: by what meanes did hee place them in this world, and from whence they were come? |
A05339 | And who is hee amongst vs that doth more than they, that is to say, which giueth but with intention to receaue? |
A05339 | But the fift man staied and would passe no further: And God asked him againe, Whither goest thou? |
A05339 | But what patrimonies? |
A05339 | For hauing well barred the comming in they may aske quiva là who goeth there? |
A05339 | For what may be more happy and more to be desired then to ioine himselfe with her that produceth and nourisheth all good and faire things? |
A05339 | He replied, asking in his language, What are ye? |
A05339 | I asked him also if he beleeued not that there were any other but one onely God? |
A05339 | Now if the Christians haue held that opinion, is it much to these poore Sauages to bee entred in those opinions that we haue recited of them? |
A05339 | What thing is there that I can wish but thee in Heauen aboue? |
A05339 | Whereunto one of ours replied, Oüen Kirau? |
A05339 | that is to say, What are ye? |
A05339 | what hast thou done that thou art so despised? |
A96422 | After a little respite( in which time a Question came to mee, if it were lawfull to take a pipe of Tobacco?) |
A96422 | Bessey, Anthony, 1609?-1657? |
A96422 | But what speciall answer, have you taken notice of? |
A96422 | By what meanes doe you look for any hope? |
A96422 | Have you any hope to escape this punishment? |
A96422 | How did you come first to any sight of sinne? |
A96422 | Q. Doe you see any punishment due to man for sinne? |
A96422 | Q. Doe you see that at any time God doth answer your prayers? |
A96422 | Q. Doe you thinke that God will doe you any good for any good that is in you? |
A96422 | Q. I pray what hurt doe you see in sinne? |
A96422 | Shall we not be abundant in Prayer, that the Lord would yet further blesse their holy endevours? |
A96422 | Shall wee not labour to strengthen their hands by ministering to them of our aboundance? |
A96422 | The substance of these words he did twice rehearse, then for instruction he first propounded what is this treasure which is hid in a feild? |
A96422 | Then he proceeded to the second parable, and his first Question was, Who is the Marchant man, that seeketh goodly pearles? |
A96422 | Wee have a little Sister, and she hath no breasts: what shall we doe for our Sister, in the day that she shall be spoken for? |
A96422 | What further evill doe you see in sinne? |
A96422 | What would you thinke if the Lord should save you from misery? |
A96422 | Whitfield, Henry, 1597- 1660? |
A35938 | But still they inquired Of what Nation? |
A35938 | He enquiring what was 〈 ◊ 〉 of George Keith''s People? |
A35938 | I then saw a house on another Oyster- hill that the water was not gott over yet; to which I gott and asked by signs if I might be there? |
A35938 | It seemed, they had killed a ● ● gg and brought him: So the Casseekey askt us it we would ea ● the Hogg? |
A35938 | May We depend upon his Authority, without danger of being imposed upon? |
A35938 | Nicka leez, Nickaleez? |
A35938 | Sometime after We had eaten, some of the Indians asked us, if We vvere Spaniards? |
A35938 | The Governour came this Morning to our Apartement, inquiring how We did? |
A35938 | The S ● anish Ca ● ● came to see the Child, and supposing that it would dye, asked If the Child was a Christian? |
A35938 | The Spanish Captain made inquiry where We were cast away, and what was 〈 ◊ 〉 that we had in our Vessel? |
A35938 | We asked if they could reach to any house or Indian- Town for shelter? |
A35938 | We stated our matter to Him and asked if we might dispose of our Negroes? |
A35938 | Which caused the 〈 ◊ 〉 to ask the Said Person, if another person which he pointed to, was Nickaleer? |
A35938 | or English? |
A59662 | 10. Who bath despised the day of small things? |
A59662 | Another propounded this question after this answer, Whether English men were ever at any time so ignorant of God and Jesus Christ as themselves? |
A59662 | Doe you beleeve the things that are told you, viz, that God is musquantum, i. e. very angry for the least sinne in your thoughts, or words, or workes? |
A59662 | How all the world is become so full of people, if they were all once drowned in the Flood? |
A59662 | How come the English to differ so much from the Indians in the knowledge of God and Jesus Christ, seeing they had all at first but one father? |
A59662 | How many commandements hath God given you to keepe? |
A59662 | How may wee come to know Jesus Christ? |
A59662 | How the English come to know God so much and they so little? |
A59662 | If God bee the author of all good, why doe you pray to Chepian the devill? |
A59662 | Our first question was, Whether they did not desire to see God, and were not tempted to thinke that there was no God, because they can not see him? |
A59662 | Qu Who made you and all the world? |
A59662 | Sundry questions also were propounded by them to us, and of us to them; one of them being asks what is sinne? |
A59662 | Their fifth Question was, that if the water was higher then the earth, how comes it to passe that it doth not overflow all the earth? |
A59662 | Their third Question was, How may wee come to serve God? |
A59662 | They said they heard the word humiliation oft used in our Churches, and they would know what that meant? |
A59662 | Wee asked him that did propound it whether he did desire indeed to serve him? |
A59662 | What a Spirit is? |
A59662 | What do you remember of what was taught you since the last time wee were here? |
A59662 | Whether doe you thinke that God or or Chepian is the author of all good? |
A59662 | Who doe you looke should save you and redeeme you from sinne and hell? |
A59662 | Why the English call them Indians, because before they came they had another name? |
A59662 | or that no wise workman made it, because they could not see him that made it? |
A59662 | or would they thinke that it made it selfe? |
A59662 | whether is not all well now? |
A02606 | Be there not any amongst them of Moses his minde, and of the Apostles, that for sooke all to follovv Christ? |
A02606 | Besides, I say the holy spirit of God hath often demaunded of me, why I was created? |
A02606 | Doe they not either vvilfully hide their Tallents, or keepe themselves at home for feare of loosing a fevv pleasures? |
A02606 | He tould them that we came to be friends, asked them if they would haue King Iames to be their King,& whether they would be his men? |
A02606 | Shall I be so vnnaturall, as not to giue bread to the hungrie? |
A02606 | Shall I despise to actuate these pious dueties of a Christian? |
A02606 | These will be doub ● lesse the empaticke effects and exultation of ● his so Christian worke, and may these nothing moue? |
A02606 | What honest spirit, hauing hitherto laboured herein, would at the vpshot( as I may so term it) be discouraged or desist? |
A02606 | What should I doe? |
A02606 | or vncharitable, as not to couer the naked? |
A02606 | what more conuenient then to haue good s ● ates abroade for our euer flowing multitudes of people at home? |
A02606 | what more praiseworthy and charitable, then to bring a sauage people from barbarisme vnto civi ● ● itie? |
A02606 | what more profitable then to purchase great wealth, which most now adaies gape after ouer- greedily? |
A02606 | will they fini ● h it in a day? |
A02606 | will they fortifie themselues? |
A02606 | will they sa ● crific ●? |
A02606 | ● hall I be of so vntoward a disposition, as to refuse to leade the blind into the right way? |
A39225 | Again, he baptizeth with fire, what i ● … that? |
A39225 | Again, such as fast an hypocritical fast, they shall be sure to be rewarded, and what reward will God give to such as fast like hypocrites? |
A39225 | Again, what kind of sacrifices must we offer? |
A39225 | And this is How can you know that there is a God, seeing you never saw him, nor can see him? |
A39225 | And what are we to doe in this day of fasting? |
A39225 | Are there many Gods? |
A39225 | Blessed are the peace- makers, and who be peace- makers? |
A39225 | But may there not be many Gods: yet so that one o ● … the chiefest and greatest of all? |
A39225 | But no man can fully know Gods nature, therefore no God? |
A39225 | Chaugunsh yous arwenunguesonngansh teous moutantamminoush Iehovah webe I se? |
A39225 | Doth he not call them to him? |
A39225 | Doth not God love righteousnesse? |
A39225 | Doth not God love them that be righteous? |
A39225 | How do you prove that there is but one true God? |
A39225 | In that he sacrificed, it was the manner of worshiping God in old time: but what sacrifices must we offer now? |
A39225 | Is not God righteous? |
A39225 | Notes for div A39225-e5730 Ob: Ten hôn kuttawáuhtaun ne atta Mando maetax kekenâuwah, matta hôm nauwo? |
A39225 | Notes for div A39225-e5870 Ob: Webe ma ● … a howan nowêta hom tabâre wauhtawn Iehovah rièwunk[ arándvit] nègouche matta Mando? |
A39225 | Notes for div A39225-e6120 Q. Shâraog Mandóak? |
A39225 | Now this day is a day of mourning, and what doe we mourn for? |
A39225 | Question How prove you that there is a God? |
A39225 | They moved this doubt whether the Translation I had made was generally understood? |
A39225 | To gouje korámen n ● … webe pâsuk wah werremat Iehovah? |
A39225 | Webe hom matta sháraog Màndoak: narraio ne pasuk negónquassik quah oussewe kerik wutche wame? |
A39225 | What are those Properties which are peculiar to God alone? |
A39225 | not outward fire, but spirituall, and it is a similitude, thus: what will fire doe? |
A39225 | or is there but one true God? |
A39225 | ux webe àtta papâsaguun wah wèrramat Iehovah? |
A12461 | And shall wee loue Thee now the lesse? |
A12461 | Did not their trembling ioynts then dread his rod? |
A12461 | How thinke you it may be rectified? |
A12461 | I confesse this is true, and it may cause some suppose they are grown inuincible: but will any goe to catch a Hare with a Taber and a Pipe? |
A12461 | I haue deeply hazarded my selfe in doing and suffering, and why should I sticke to hazard my reputation in Recording? |
A12461 | I thanke God I neuer vndertooke any thing yet any could tax me of carelesnesse or dishonesty, and what is hee to whom I am indebted or troublesome? |
A12461 | Mowchick woyawgh tawgh ● oeragh kaqueremecher, I am very hungry? |
A12461 | Now I know the common question is, For all those miseries, where is the wealth they haue got, or the Gold or Siluer Mines? |
A12461 | Or is there more of those Vast Countries knowne, Then by thy Labours and Relations showne First, best? |
A12461 | Some few particulars perhaps haue sped; But wherein hath the publicke prospered? |
A12461 | To conclude, were it not for Master Cherley and a few priuate aduenturers with them, what haue we there for all these inducements? |
A12461 | WHat conceiue you is the cause the Plantation hath prospered no better since you left it in so good a forwardnesse? |
A12461 | Was it vertue in them to prouide that doth maintaine vs, and basenesse in vs to doe the like for others? |
A12461 | What can you get by warre, when we can hide our provisions and fly to the woods? |
A12461 | What charge thinke you would haue setled the gouernment both for defence and planting when you left it? |
A12461 | What conceiue you should be the cause, though the Country be good, there comes nothing but Tobacco? |
A12461 | What conceiue you would be the remedy and the charge? |
A12461 | What growing state was there euer in the world which had not the like? |
A12461 | What thinke you are the defects of the gouernment both here and there? |
A12461 | What voiages and discoueries, E ● st and West, North and South, yea about the world, make they? |
A12461 | Where shall we looke to finde a Iulius Caesar, whose atchieuments shine as cleare in his owne Commentaries, as they did in the field? |
A12461 | and should they not bring their skins to vs? |
A12461 | loue you not me? |
A12461 | what shall I eate? |
A12461 | why should not the rich haruest of our hopes be seasonably expected? |
A39226 | 16 Christ saith, Who say ye that I am? |
A39226 | A. Christ: and Who must sanctifie you? |
A39226 | After I heard the Minister ask, Who made you? |
A39226 | Again it is said in Catechism, Why is Christ a Prophet? |
A39226 | Again it is said, What else hath Christ done for us? |
A39226 | And my heart thought, does God pardon mee, and love mee? |
A39226 | And when it was Objected, What should the rest of the people do, if the principal and most able should not keep their Sabbaths among them? |
A39226 | Deacon Park urged, Doth hee hate sin because it is against God? |
A39226 | Do yee not remember what David did on the Sabbath day, and was blamelesse? |
A39226 | God: and Who redeemed you? |
A39226 | He asked, whose son he was, they said mine: he said, do you pray to God? |
A39226 | I answered, Who knoweth that? |
A39226 | I asked Mr Iackson, Whether God knew our language? |
A39226 | I said, who is witness of that? |
A39226 | May wee not therefore hopefully expect, that the Top- stone shall be set up with a shout of Grace, Grace to it? |
A39226 | My heart asked what are dark workes? |
A39226 | No man cometh to the Father, but by me: My heart said, so be it Lord; I desire to come to God by Christ; and I said, Why did the wicked kill Christ? |
A39226 | Shall I pray? |
A39226 | The Minister gave him two apples: then the Minister said to me, Do you pray to God? |
A39226 | Then I said, English men understand not me, and does God understand me? |
A39226 | Then Mr Danforth called Anthony and asked him, whether he believed that it was the duty of men to labour six daies in the week? |
A39226 | Then my heart said, What shall I do? |
A39226 | Then my kindred said, praying is a vain thing, why will you pray? |
A39226 | Then you called the Children to Catechism: and one question is, Who redeemed you? |
A39226 | Therefore I will not pray, can poore men pray? |
A39226 | They answered, sianes; and what is day? |
A39226 | What full resignations of themselves have they made to the commands of Christ after closing with him by faith in the promise? |
A39226 | What hath Christ done for us? |
A39226 | What is it in sin, why hee hateth it now more then before? |
A39226 | What wrestlings had they with unbelief, before they could close with Christ in the promise? |
A39226 | When I heard of the great works of Christ, I said, Oh what shall I do, that I may get Christ? |
A39226 | When it was Questioned what English Church they should joyn unto? |
A39226 | When wee came to the Magistrates, and Cutshamoquin asked, Why they came on the Sabbath day? |
A39226 | Whether doth Satan still tempt you with former lusts and temptations? |
A39226 | Who redeemed you? |
A39226 | [ In private we asked him what ground or reason moved his Father so to speak? |
A39226 | and what do you when you are tempted? |
A39226 | and who can witness that? |
A39226 | came with mee; the Minister call''d my son, and set him afore, and asked him, Who made him? |
A85452 | ( Why?) |
A85452 | ( or otherwise) have you not such a gainfull Trade as none the like in the Towne where you live? |
A85452 | All Nations band your selves together now, You shall fall down as dust from bellows blown: How easie can our King your power bow? |
A85452 | Also how came it to passe that the Lord put it into your hearts to set upon a Reformation, was it not by prayer attained? |
A85452 | And now to you I put the question, who would not fight in such a cause with an agile spirit, and undaunted boldnesse? |
A85452 | Are not your Children very well provided for as they come to years? |
A85452 | Are you not inriched daily? |
A85452 | Babylon is fallen, the God of truth hath said it; then who would not be a Souldier on Christs side, where is such a certainty of victory? |
A85452 | Behold his swiftnes all you that have said, where is the promise of his comming? |
A85452 | But here they tell me of a naked Christ, what is the whole life of a Christian upon this Earth? |
A85452 | Can there be ever night in his Presence, whose eyes are ten thousand times higher than the Sun? |
A85452 | Christ is come down possession for to take Of his deer purchase; who can hinder him? |
A85452 | Christs wrath is kindled, who can stand before His anger, that so long hath been provoked? |
A85452 | Could Caesar so suddenly fetch over fresh forces from Europe to Asia Pompy to foyle? |
A85452 | Doth Christ build Churches? |
A85452 | Eliot thy Name is, through the wild woods spread, In Indians mouths frequent''s thy fame, for why? |
A85452 | Gennors, dost love thy Christ? |
A85452 | Gentle Reader make use of this memorable Providence of Christ for his New England Churches, where had this poore people this great sum of money? |
A85452 | HArbertus, hye on valiant, Why lingerst thou so long? |
A85452 | I pray be not too hasty; hath not the Lord said, Come out of her my people? |
A85452 | Is''t not to war''mongst Christ''s true worthies here, What wilt give out, thou''lt loose thy former toile? |
A85452 | Oh poor Virginia ▪ dost thou send away the Ministers of Christ with threatning speeches? |
A85452 | Oh yee New England Men and Women, who hath bewitched you that you should not obey the truth? |
A85452 | Sure their increase might thee much profit bring: What, leave Christs Church? |
A85452 | Thatcher, what mean''st to leavs thy little flock? |
A85452 | The rage of Seas, and hunger sharp, wants of a desart Land, Your noble hearts have overcom, what shall this work withstand? |
A85452 | Thy labours great have met with catching cheats, Mixing their Brasse with thy bright Gold, for why? |
A85452 | Vndanted close and clash with them; for why?'' |
A85452 | What Man do''st meane to lay thy Trumpet downe? |
A85452 | What greater joy can come thy Saints among, Then to behold their Christ exalted high? |
A85452 | What helps can you have there that you must not carry from hence? |
A85452 | Where shall we go Lord Christ? |
A85452 | Will not you believe that a Nation can be borne in a day? |
A85452 | With little flock doth Newman pack away; The righteous lips sure might a many feed; Remov''st for gaine? |
A85452 | people why, doth Christ deny this worthies life to lengthen? |
A85452 | we had a notable piece of Prophecy, quoth the man that was missing, who was it that Preached? |
A85452 | who can them deface? |
A85452 | why do''st leave thy native soile? |
A46842 | ( a) Do you thinke I have Faith? |
A46842 | ( a) How makes Christ Peace, between God and man? |
A46842 | ( a) How shall I know when God accepts my Prayer? |
A46842 | ( a) Why did Christ dye in our steed? |
A46842 | ( a) Why doth God punish in Hell for ever? |
A46842 | ( b) When every day my heart thinkes, I shall dye, and goe to Hell for my sinnes, what shall I doe? |
A46842 | ( c) May a good man sin sometimes, and yet be a good man? |
A46842 | ( d) If two Families dwell in one house, and one prayes not: what shall the other that praieth, doe to them? |
A46842 | ( q) How often would I have gathered you? |
A46842 | A Squaw or Indian woman, queried, May I praie in the wood, in a private place, when Sanop( the Man) is from home? |
A46842 | An old man asked, Is it not too late for one so old as I, to repent, or seeke after God? |
A46842 | And thus having spent three houres with them, we asking, If they were not wearie? |
A46842 | Another asked, Seeing we all come from one father; how came the English to know God, more then we? |
A46842 | From the rising of the Sun, to the going downe,& c. After which, some asked, If it be thus, then former Indians are they all gone to Hell? |
A46842 | God will not hold him guiltlesse, that taketh his Name in vaine? |
A46842 | How can we sanctifie a Sabbath? |
A46842 | How doth Christ redeeme us from sin? |
A46842 | How is the Spirit of God in us? |
A46842 | How many Commands hath God given you? |
A46842 | How many good People were in Sodome, at its burning? |
A46842 | How may we come to serve God? |
A46842 | How may we lay hold on him, and where; he being absent? |
A46842 | How should I pray to Christ? |
A46842 | How they may know, that their Faith and Prayers are good? |
A46842 | I find I want wisdome, what shall I doe to get it? |
A46842 | I see why I must feare Hell; and I doe so: Why must I feare God? |
A46842 | If I sin, and know not it is a sinne; what will God say to that? |
A46842 | If a man be almost a good man, and dye so, whither goeth his soule? |
A46842 | If a man thinke a Prayer, doth God know it, and reward it? |
A46842 | If a man will force his Daughter to marrie one that she doth not love; what will God say? |
A46842 | If my Wife worketh the night before, or after the Sabbath; is it a sinne? |
A46842 | If my heart be full of ill thoughts, and I repent( a) pray, and yet its full, againe and againe: What will God say? |
A46842 | If one speake of anothers faults, and not to himselfe: is it a sin? |
A46842 | If they leave off Pawawing, what shall they do when they are sick? |
A46842 | In Wicked( b) Dreames, doth the Soule sin? |
A46842 | Is Faith in my heart or in my minde? |
A46842 | Is there no Application hereof that we should make, for our owne further profit and Edification? |
A46842 | May a woman that prayeth to God, marrie one that doth not? |
A46842 | Now Indians desire to go to heaven, what shal they do? |
A46842 | One Question this day after Lecture was, Because other Abergenians( or Indians) aske us thus; What get you by praying to God? |
A46842 | One asked, If a man have stollen, and restored again, and was not punished by the Sachim,( or Indian Governour:) what then? |
A46842 | Question was, Whether doe I praie, when I speak nothing, if my heart goes with that which my Husband praieth? |
A46842 | The first Question, How may we come to know Iesus Christ? |
A46842 | The second Question was, Whether God, or Iesus Christ, did understand Indian Prayers? |
A46842 | The third Question by another; Whether English- men were at any time so ignorant of God, and Iesus Christ, as they? |
A46842 | Touching the first Woman whose case was put about joyning in heart with her Husbands Prayer; Whether then she prayed to God? |
A46842 | What is Faith? |
A46842 | What meaneth this? |
A46842 | What sayes a soul, when it goes to Heaven or Hell? |
A46842 | When God saith, Honour thy Father; meanes hee three Fathers? |
A46842 | When we concluded, the Chiefe of them asked, When we would come againe? |
A46842 | Where is he now? |
A46842 | Where was Christ borne? |
A46842 | Whether a Husband should praie, if he still continue in passion against his Wife, though not so much as he was? |
A46842 | Whether is this a sin in me? |
A46842 | Whether they all understood? |
A46842 | Who doe you looke should save you from Sinne, and Hell? |
A46842 | Who kill''d Christ? |
A46842 | Who made you, and all the world? |
A46842 | Why did Christ dye for us? |
A46842 | Why did not God kill the Devill? |
A46842 | Why doth God make good men sick? |
A46842 | Why have not Beasts a Soule, as Man hath; seeing they have Love, Anger,& c. as Man hath? |
A46842 | Why some are so bad, that they hate such as would teach them good? |
A46842 | Why will ye die? |
A46842 | Why, and how should We love our Enemies? |
A46842 | dwells the Devill in us, as we in a house? |
A46842 | is all well? |
A46842 | our Father, our Sachim, and God? |
A46842 | whether the Devil or Man were made first? |
A46842 | you goe naked still, and our Corne is as good as yours; else wee would praie to God too: what shall we answer to this? |
A66681 | And if they repent in hell, why will not God let them out again? |
A66681 | And what doth a wicked Soule say when it commeth into Hell? |
A66681 | And what is the meaning of that point? |
A66681 | But why must I feare God? |
A66681 | Did Abimeleck ▪ know, Sarah was Abrahams wife? |
A66681 | Did Adam see God before he sinned? |
A66681 | Did not Abraham sin in saying she is my sister? |
A66681 | Doe not Enlishmen spoile their soules, to say a thing cost them more then it did? |
A66681 | Doth the Devill dwell in us as we dwell in an house? |
A66681 | Doth the soule in Heaven remember what it did here on earth before he dyed? |
A66681 | Durst you deny it? |
A66681 | How doth Christ make peace betwixt God and man? |
A66681 | How doth Christ redeem and deliver us from sinne? |
A66681 | How is the spirit of God in us? |
A66681 | How is the tongue like fire, and like poyson? |
A66681 | How long was Adam good before he sinned? |
A66681 | How many good people were in Sodome when it was burnt? |
A66681 | How shall I bring mine heart to love Prayer? |
A66681 | How shall the Resurrection be, and when? |
A66681 | I finde I want wisdome, what shall I do to be wise? |
A66681 | I know not how to pray to Christ and the Spirit, I know a little how to pray to God? |
A66681 | If God made hell in one of the six dayes, why did God make Hell before Adam had sinned? |
A66681 | If I doe that which is a sinne, and do not know it is a sin, what will God say to that? |
A66681 | If I heare Gods Word when I am young, and do not believe, but when I am old I believe: what will God say? |
A66681 | If I reprove a man for sinne, and he answer, why doe you speak thus angerly to me: Mr. Eliot teacheth us to love one another, is this well? |
A66681 | If a man be almost a good man, and dyeth; whither goeth his soule? |
A66681 | If a man repent, doth God take away his sinnes, and forgive him? |
A66681 | If a man think a prayer, doth God know it, and will he blesse him? |
A66681 | If a man will make his Daughter marry a man whom she doth not love, what will God say? |
A66681 | If a wicked man pray, whether doth he make a good prayer? |
A66681 | If a wise put away her husband because he will pray to God, and she will not, what must be done in this case? |
A66681 | If any talk of another mans faults, and tell others of it when hee is present to answer, is not that a sinne? |
A66681 | If my wife doe some work in the house on the night before the Sabbath, and some work on the Sabbath night, whether is this a sin? |
A66681 | If one be loved of all Indians good and bad, another is hated of all saving a few that be good, doth God love both these? |
A66681 | If one man repent, and pray once in a day, another man often in a day; whether doth one of them go to Heaven, the other not? |
A66681 | If there be young women pray to God, may such as pray to God marry one that will not pray to God? |
A66681 | If two families dwell in one house, and one prayeth, and the o ● … her not, what shall they that pray do to them that do not? |
A66681 | In wicked dreames doth the soule sin? |
A66681 | May a good man sin sometimes? |
A66681 | Now the Indians desire to goe to Heaven, what shall we do that we may go thither when we dye? |
A66681 | Or may he be a good man, and yet sin sometimes? |
A66681 | Seeing Eve was first in sinne, whether did she dye first? |
A66681 | Seeing God promised Abraham so many children, like the starres for multitude, why did he give him so few? |
A66681 | Seeing we see not God with our eyes, if a man dream that he seeth God, doth his soule then see him? |
A66681 | Shall we see God in Heaven? |
A66681 | She dyed of a sicknesse she took in childbed: I severall times visited her, prayed with her, asked her about her spirituall estate? |
A66681 | The second is, what Family, Tribe, Kindred, or people it was that first planted, and afterwards filled that vast and long unknown Countrey of America? |
A66681 | VVHy have not beasts a soul as man hath, seeing they have love, anger,& c. as man hath? |
A66681 | VVhat is Salvation? |
A66681 | VVhat is the Kingdome of Heaven? |
A66681 | VVhether is faith set in my heart, or in my minde? |
A66681 | VVhy did Christ dye for us, and who did kill him? |
A66681 | What doe all these things declare? |
A66681 | What force of wicked men is lawfull, and what is not? |
A66681 | What if a Minister weare long hayre, as some other men do, what will God say? |
A66681 | What if false Witnesses accuse me of murther or some soul sin? |
A66681 | What is Faith? |
A66681 | What is Law? |
A66681 | What meaneth this, That God will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his name in vaine? |
A66681 | What punishment is due to lyars? |
A66681 | When God saith, Honour thy Father, doth he mean three Fathers? |
A66681 | When every day my heart thinks I must dye, and goe to hell for my sins, what shall I doe in this case? |
A66681 | When the Soule goes to heaven, what doth it say when it comes there? |
A66681 | Whether did God make hell before Adam sinned? |
A66681 | Whether do you think I have Faith? |
A66681 | Whether doth God make bad men dream good Dreames? |
A66681 | Who first gave Lawes to men? |
A66681 | Who killed Christ? |
A66681 | Why did Abraham buy a place to bury in? |
A66681 | Why did Christ dy ● … in our stead? |
A66681 | Why did the Iewes give the Watchmen money to tell a lye? |
A66681 | Why did the earth shake at Christs Resurrection? |
A66681 | Why doth God make good men sick? |
A66681 | Why doth God punish in hell for ever? |
A66681 | Why doth God so hate them that teach others to commit sin? |
A66681 | Why is God so angry with murtherers? |
A66681 | Why must we love our enemies, and how shall we doe it? |
A66681 | You say our body is made of clay, what is the Sunne or Moone made of? |
A66681 | a How shall I know when God accepts my prayers? |
A66681 | and is it not all one as to steale? |
A66681 | and was it true? |
A66681 | and where is it principally present? |
A66681 | b Doth the soule in Heaven know things done here on earth? |
A66681 | could she love God, except he loved her first? |
A66681 | d Why doth Christ compare the Kingdom of heaven to a net? |
A66681 | or what difference is there? |
A66681 | or what is to bee done in this case? |
A66681 | or when doth a wicked man pray a good prayer? |
A96415 | At what age may maids marry? |
A96415 | Can one be saved by reading the book of the creature? |
A96415 | Can they in Heaven see us here on Earth? |
A96415 | Can we see God? |
A96415 | Do all evill thoughts come from the Devill, and all good ones from God? |
A96415 | Do they dwell in severall houses in heaven, or altogether, and what do they? |
A96415 | Do they know each other in Hell? |
A96415 | Do they see and know each other? |
A96415 | Doth God know who shall repent, and beleeve, and who not? |
A96415 | Hiacoomes replyed, what do you think of your self? |
A96415 | How do you know what is done in heaven? |
A96415 | How doth God arise, and we worship at his feet, what meaneth it? |
A96415 | How doth much sinne make grace abound? |
A96415 | How must I wait on God? |
A96415 | How shall I finde happinesse? |
A96415 | I answered yea; he asked how many? |
A96415 | I approved this answer also I asked what else they spake of? |
A96415 | I asked him what he said to that? |
A96415 | I asked what else they spake? |
A96415 | I asked what reason they gave? |
A96415 | I asked what reason they gave? |
A96415 | I said sixe; he asked how many of them were sonnes? |
A96415 | I told him five; then he asked whether my sonnes should teach the Indians to know God as I do? |
A96415 | If I do not love wicked men, nor good men, am I good? |
A96415 | If I teach on the Sabbath which you have taught us, and forget some, Is that a fin? |
A96415 | If a child die before he sinne, whether goeth his soul? |
A96415 | If a man be wise, and his Sachem weak must he yet obey him? |
A96415 | If a man know Gods Word, but beleeve it not; and he teach others, is that good teaching? |
A96415 | If a wicked man prayeth, and teacheth, doth God accept, or what saies God? |
A96415 | If all the world be burnt up, where shall hell be? |
A96415 | If but one parent beleeve what state are our children in? |
A96415 | If one purposeth to pray, and yet dieth before that time, whether goeth his soul? |
A96415 | If one that prayes to God sins like him that prayes not, is not he worse? |
A96415 | If so old a man as I repent, may I be saved? |
A96415 | May a man have good words and deeds and a bad heart, and another have bad words and deeds, and yet a good heart? |
A96415 | Or when did he suffer in our stead, afore death, or after? |
A96415 | Seeing the boody sinneth, why should the soule be punished, and what punishment shall the body have? |
A96415 | Shall I know you in heaven? |
A96415 | Shall we see Christ at the day of Judgment? |
A96415 | Then the question was asked, Who is there that doth not fear the Pawwawes? |
A96415 | We are commanded to honour the Sachem, but is the Sachem commanded to lovve us? |
A96415 | What is it to beleeve in Christ? |
A96415 | What is it to eate Christ his flesh and drink his blood, what meaneth it? |
A96415 | What is the meaning of the word Hebrews? |
A96415 | What is true Repentance, or how shall I know when this is true? |
A96415 | What is watchfulnesse? |
A96415 | What meaneth God, when he sayes, yee shall be my Jewels? |
A96415 | What meaneth a new heaven and a new earth? |
A96415 | What meaneth lifting up hands to God? |
A96415 | What meaneth that his wife shall be like a Vine, and his children like young plants? |
A96415 | What meaneth that of the two debtors, one oweth much; another but little? |
A96415 | What meaneth that, Covet not thy neighbours house,& c? |
A96415 | What meaneth that, Let the trees of the Wood rejoyce? |
A96415 | What meaneth that, That the Master doth not thank his servant for waiting on him? |
A96415 | What meaneth that, The woman brought to Christ a box of Oyle, and washt his feet with tears& c? |
A96415 | What meaneth that, We can not serve two masters? |
A96415 | What meaneth that, love enemies and wicked men? |
A96415 | What meaneth, arise O Lord into thy resting place? |
A96415 | What meaneth, hunger and thirst after righteousnesse, and they blessed? |
A96415 | What meaneth, that Christ meriteth eternal life for us? |
A96415 | What meaneth, that blessed are they that mourn? |
A96415 | What meaneth, thou shalt not covet any thing that is thy neighbours? |
A96415 | What should I pray for at night, and what at morning, and what on the Sabbath day? |
A96415 | When Christ arose, whence came his soul? |
A96415 | When English- men choose Magistrates and Ministers, how do they know who be good men, that they dare trust? |
A96415 | When I answered from heaven; It was replyed, How then was Christ punished in our stead? |
A96415 | When I answered in the affirmative, then it was replyed, Why then did God use so much meanes with Pharaoh? |
A96415 | When I pray every day, why is my heart so hard still, even as a stone? |
A96415 | When I pray for a soft heart, why is it still hard? |
A96415 | When I see a good example, and know that it is right, why do I not do the same? |
A96415 | When all the world shall be burnt up, what shall be in the roome of it; an old wonans question yester day? |
A96415 | When such die as never heard of Christ, whether do they go? |
A96415 | When the wicked die, do they first go to heaven to the judgment seate of Christ to be judged, and then go away to hell? |
A96415 | When we come to beleeve, how many of our children doth God take with us, whether all only young ones, or at what age? |
A96415 | Whitfield, Henry, 1597- 1660? |
A96415 | Whitfield, Henry, 1597- 1660? |
A96415 | Whot anger is good, and what is bad? |
A96415 | Why did they eate the Passeover, with loynes girt, and shooes on their feet? |
A96415 | Why do English men so edgerly kill all shakes? |
A96415 | Why doth God say, I am the God of the Hebrews? |
A96415 | Why must we be like Salt? |
A96415 | Why they having the same Bible with us, yet spake not the same things? |
A96415 | and if others beleeve that which he teacheth, is that good beleeving, or faith? |
A96415 | and some I mistake and teach wrong, Is that a sin? |
A96415 | and who can forbid that they should be baptized? |
A96415 | by what power they did think to do this? |
A96415 | if not, how can they tell how things be? |
A96415 | if they say they were, I desire to know what they except against? |
A96415 | upon this question I asked them, how they could tell when a man knoweth Gods Word that he doth not beleeve it? |
A96415 | whither would you go for help? |
A39229 | And when shall they enjoy the Ordinances of Iesus Christ in Church- estate? |
A39229 | But how should it pr ● voke the s ● ed of Iacob to give thanks, when they find that they have not sought the Lord in vaine? |
A39229 | By whose strength is it kept together? |
A39229 | God saith to me, onely punish your Child, and how can I love God, if I should refuse to doe that? |
A39229 | Have not some Indians many Gods? |
A39229 | How cometh it to passe that the Sun riseth and setteth, that there is winter and Summer, day and night? |
A39229 | How did God make the world? |
A39229 | How doe you know the word of God is Gods word? |
A39229 | How doe you know these Gods are no Gods? |
A39229 | How doe you understand that God ruleth in your heart? |
A39229 | How doth Christ work Grace in our hearts? |
A39229 | How long shall they be in that state? |
A39229 | How long was God making the world? |
A39229 | How many Commandements are there? |
A39229 | How many Gods are there? |
A39229 | How many are the Offices of Christ? |
A39229 | How many kinds of sin are there? |
A39229 | In these Attributes wherein are we like God? |
A39229 | In what condition was man made? |
A39229 | In which of these are we like unto God? |
A39229 | Is there any Promise set home on your heart that comforteth you, what Promise doe you remember? |
A39229 | May we not now( Beloved) make mention of Rahab and Babylon to them that know Christ? |
A39229 | Now the Question remaineth, What shall we further doe? |
A39229 | Now the world is made, can it keepe it selfe? |
A39229 | One onely God, but he is three, the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost? |
A39229 | Or whether when you find wickednesse in your heart, you are not tempted, that you can not believe? |
A39229 | Out of what matter did God make the world? |
A39229 | Q How many Gods are there? |
A39229 | Q. Doe you believe in Iesus Christ? |
A39229 | Q. Doe you finde this in your heart, that your heart is turned from your sins? |
A39229 | Q. Doe you know now? |
A39229 | Q. Doe you love God? |
A39229 | Q. Shall all men be saved by Iesus Christ? |
A39229 | Q. Wherein doe you breake the Law of God? |
A39229 | Quest: WHat is God? |
A39229 | Seeing but one man Adam sinned, how come all to dye? |
A39229 | The same Question was asked another, What hath Christ merited? |
A39229 | To whom is man now like? |
A39229 | Was there alwayes an Heaven and Earth, how came they to be? |
A39229 | Was there then any sin in the soule of man? |
A39229 | Were they euer? |
A39229 | What Covenant did God make wth Adam? |
A39229 | What Sacrifice did Christ offer? |
A39229 | What are the Attributes of God? |
A39229 | What are the Attributes of God? |
A39229 | What change hath God wrought in you of late, which was not in you in former times? |
A39229 | What death dyed Christ for us? |
A39229 | What doe you believe about the immortality of the soule, and resurrection of the body? |
A39229 | What doe you call it? |
A39229 | What doe you find in the true God, that you find not in false Gods? |
A39229 | What doth Christ in heaven for us? |
A39229 | What doth he put into your heart, that causeth your heart to break? |
A39229 | What else hath Christ done for us? |
A39229 | What else hath Christ done for us? |
A39229 | What good things see you in the English? |
A39229 | What hath Christ deserved, or merited for us? |
A39229 | What hath Christ done for us? |
A39229 | What is Eternall? |
A39229 | What is God? |
A39229 | What is a temptation of the Devill in your heart, doe you understand what it is? |
A39229 | What is faith in Iesus Christ? |
A39229 | What is infinite? |
A39229 | What is it to believe in Iesus Christ? |
A39229 | What is repentance for sinne? |
A39229 | What is sin? |
A39229 | What is that Image of God, which he lost? |
A39229 | What is the Image of God in man? |
A39229 | What is the New Covenant? |
A39229 | What is the Word of God? |
A39229 | What is the first Commandement? |
A39229 | What is the wages of sin? |
A39229 | What is this likenesse to Satan? |
A39229 | What most of all breaks your heart, why is your heart broken? |
A39229 | What moveth Iesus Christ to send his Spirit, whether any thing in your selfe? |
A39229 | What reason or justice is there, that Christ should dye for our sins? |
A39229 | What see you in sin that breaks your heart? |
A39229 | What was the sin of Adam? |
A39229 | What worke of the Spirit finde you in your heart? |
A39229 | What wounds your heart most, because you sin, or because you must goe to hell? |
A39229 | When Adam sinned, what befell him? |
A39229 | When Christ cometh to judge the world, what then shall become of them? |
A39229 | When God sendeth his Spirit, what doth it worke in us? |
A39229 | Whether are not your sins, and the temptations of Hobbomak more strong since, then before you prayed to God? |
A39229 | Whether doe you believe that these very bodies of ours shall rise againe? |
A39229 | Whether doe you indeed believe there is a God, Christ, Heaven, Hell, whether have you any doubts concerning these thing, or no? |
A39229 | Whether doth not your soule groane within you, under the sense of unbelief, and other sins? |
A39229 | Whether have you found at any time any such worke in your selfe? |
A39229 | Whether have you not many jealousies and feares that you love not God in truth? |
A39229 | Whether shall they ever dye any more? |
A39229 | Who among the Indians shall goe to God, and what are the signes that they shall goe to God? |
A39229 | Who is Iesus Christ? |
A39229 | Who is Iesus Christ? |
A39229 | Who put him to death? |
A39229 | Whose wages is death? |
A39229 | Why are you troubled for sin, that none ever knew but your selfe? |
A39229 | Why doe some believe in Christ, and not others, what maketh the difference? |
A39229 | Why doe they believe God? |
A39229 | Why doe you believe it? |
A39229 | Why doe you cast away your sins? |
A39229 | Why doe you love God? |
A39229 | Why doe you need Christ? |
A39229 | Why doe you say, Christ Iesus was a man that he might dye, doe onely men dye? |
A39229 | Why doth thy heart desire Iesus Christ more then sin, and thy former Idolls? |
A39229 | Why is Christ Iesus God? |
A39229 | Why was Christ God? |
A39229 | Why was Christ Iesus a man? |
A39229 | Why was Christ man? |
A39229 | and that their labours have not been in vaine in the Lord? |
A39229 | doth the soule dye when the body dyeth? |
A62471 | 1. Who made you and all the world? |
A62471 | 2. Who shall save you from sinne and hell? |
A62471 | 20. besides, that dulcis amor patriae, how many hazards did they runne into by dangerous and tedious sea- voyages? |
A62471 | 23. should suffer so great a portion of mankind ever to remaine in darknesse, and in the shadow of death? |
A62471 | 31. should have no compassion of such an innumerable multitude of soules? |
A62471 | 37. and so they are every where to this day: what more reproachfull obloquy is there among men, then this, Thou art a Iew? |
A62471 | A man before hee knew God had two wives, the first is barren, the second brought forth sweet children, which of these must hee put away? |
A62471 | Againe, If a wise Indian teach good things to other Indians, should not he be as a father or brother to such? |
A62471 | An old Powoow asked, Why we had not taught them to know God sooner? |
A62471 | An old widdow Squaw said, if when men know God, God loves them, why then are any afflicted after they know him? |
A62471 | And what saith a wicked soule when it comes to hell? |
A62471 | And where being now absent from them? |
A62471 | Another said, Suppose two men sin, one knowes it, the other doth not, will God punish both alike? |
A62471 | Being satisfied in this also, they said, How may wee come to serve God? |
A62471 | Can one be saved by reading the booke of the creature? |
A62471 | Doe not Englishmen spoile their soules to say a thing cost them more than it did, and is it not all one as to steale? |
A62471 | Doth God know who shall repent and believe, and who not? |
A62471 | Doth the Devill dwell in us, as we dwell in an house? |
A62471 | Doth the soule in heaven know things done here on earth? |
A62471 | Have no fellowship,& c. They asked what Englishmen thought of him, because he came among the wicked Indians and taught them? |
A62471 | How doth Christ make peace betwixt God and man, what is the meaning of that point? |
A62471 | How far that place from them? |
A62471 | How is all the world become so full of people, being all were once drowned in the floud? |
A62471 | How long is it before men believe that have the word of God made knowne unto them? |
A62471 | How long was Adam good before he sinned? |
A62471 | How many commandements hath God given you to keepe? |
A62471 | How must I waite on God? |
A62471 | How shall I bring my heart to love prayer? |
A62471 | How shall I know when God accepts my prayers? |
A62471 | How the English know God so much, and they so little? |
A62471 | How they might lay hold on him? |
A62471 | How they should know when their faith and prayers bee good? |
A62471 | I see why I must feare hell, and do so every day, but why must I fear God? |
A62471 | If I do that which is a sin, and know it not to be a sin, what will God say to that? |
A62471 | If I reprove a man for sin, and he answer why do you speak thus angerly, Mr. Elliot teacheth us to love one another, is this well? |
A62471 | If I teach on the Sabbath that which you taught us, and forget something, is that a sin? |
A62471 | If a child die before he sin, whither goeth his soule? |
A62471 | If a man know Gods word, but believe it not, and yet teach others, is that good teaching, and if others believe that teaching, is that good believing? |
A62471 | If a man should be inclosed in iron a foot thicke and thrown into the fire, what would become of his soul, would it come forth thence? |
A62471 | If a man will make his daughter marry one she doth not love, what will God say? |
A62471 | If a wife put away her husband because he will pray to God and she will not, what must be done in this case? |
A62471 | If any of them shall goe to heaven, seeing their hearts are so full of sin, especially Nanwunwudsquas, mad after women? |
A62471 | If my wife doth some worke on the night before the Sabbath, and on the Sabbath night also, is it a sin? |
A62471 | If one purpose to pray, and die before that time, wither goeth his soule? |
A62471 | If one that prayes to God sin, like him that prayes not, is not he worse? |
A62471 | If the father be bad, and the child good, will God be offended with that child? |
A62471 | If they did not desire to see God, and if they were not tempted to thinke there was no God, because they could not see him? |
A62471 | If they leave Powawing and pray to God, what shall they doe when they are sicke, having no skill in Physick? |
A62471 | If two families dwell in one house, one prayeth, the other- doth ▪ not, what shall they that pray do to them that pray not? |
A62471 | If we be made so weake by sinne in our hearts, how can wee come before God and sanctifie a sabbath? |
A62471 | In wicked dreames doth the soule sin? |
A62471 | May such women as pray to God, marry those that do not pray to God? |
A62471 | Now the Indians desire to go to heaven, what shall we doe that we may goe thither when we die? |
A62471 | Shall not those poore Natives in New England rise up in judgement against Old England and condemne it? |
A62471 | Shall we call this a day of small things? |
A62471 | The Indians asked Mr. Elliot, if any teach us good things should wee not love him as a father, or a brother? |
A62471 | They demanded, How the English came to differ so much from the Indians in knowledge, seeing at first they had all one father? |
A62471 | To what Nation Iesus Christ came first, and when? |
A62471 | VVhat anger is good, and what is bad? |
A62471 | VVhat is the meaning of the name Hebrews, why doth God say he is the God of the Hebrews? |
A62471 | VVhat meanes that, Blessed are they that mourne? |
A62471 | VVhat meaneth lifting up hands to God? |
A62471 | We have a little sister, and she hath no breasts, what shall we doe for our sister in the day when she shall be spoken for? |
A62471 | What Countreyman Christ was? |
A62471 | What a spirit is? |
A62471 | What doe you remember of that spoken to you the last time wee were here? |
A62471 | What force of wicked men is lawfull, and what not? |
A62471 | What if a Minister weare long haire, as some other men do, what will God say? |
A62471 | What is faith? |
A62471 | What is the meaning of the word Humiliation, so often heard of by them in our Churches? |
A62471 | What is true repentance, and how shall I know when it is true? |
A62471 | What should I pray for at night, what at morning, and what on the Sabbath day? |
A62471 | When God saith honour thy Father and thy Mother, doth he meane three Fathers; our Father; our Sachim; and God? |
A62471 | When I pray for a soft heart, why is it still hard? |
A62471 | When a soule goes to heaven what doth it say? |
A62471 | When my heart prayeth with my husband praying, is this praying to God aright? |
A62471 | When such die as never heard of Christ, whither do they go? |
A62471 | Where Christ was now? |
A62471 | Whether is faith set in my heart or in my minde? |
A62471 | Whether their children goe when they die, because they have not sinned? |
A62471 | Whether they should believe dreames? |
A62471 | Why did Christ die in our steads? |
A62471 | Why did not God give all men good hearts? |
A62471 | Why did not God having all power, kill the devill, that made all men so bad? |
A62471 | Why doth God punish in hell for ever, man doth not so, but after a time lets out of prison againe? |
A62471 | Why doth God so hate them that teach others to commit sinne? |
A62471 | Why have not beasts a soule as well as man, seeing they have love, anger,& c. as man hath? |
A62471 | Why must we love our enemies, and how shall we do it? |
A62471 | Why some so bad that they hate those that would teach them? |
A62471 | all the light thereof quite extinguished? |
A62471 | and how can there be an image of God, seeing it is forbiden in the second Commandement? |
A62471 | and not so much as the least glimpse thereof remaine? |
A62471 | and their fifth, If the water be higher then the earth, why did it not overflow it? |
A62471 | and what soule is not grieved for the great divisions of England? |
A62471 | another demanded, if English men were once so ignorant of Christ as themselves? |
A62471 | for t is said in the second commandement, hee will visit the sinnes of the fathers upon the children? |
A62471 | how doe you cast them into prison, and fetters, that are not able to pay their debts? |
A62471 | how were they affrighted when the feare of Spanish cruelties provoked fathers, mothers, children, to hang themselves together? |
A62471 | if the former, they offended God, if the latter, they illegitimate their owne deare children? |
A62471 | is it credible there should be no records thereof in the Annalls of any Nation? |
A62471 | is it likely they should be so tenacious in a farre and forraigne land, that never kept them in their owne, as the next words expresse? |
A62471 | this being indeed so large a portion of it; how have they bin scattered into all the four windes, if one of the foure did never blow upon them? |
A62471 | which being answered, their fourth question was, Why the seawater was salt, and the land water fresh? |
A62471 | who bewailes not to see the breakings of the sheepfold? |
A62471 | who mournes not to heare the strange bleeting of the flocks? |
A62471 | why then did God use so much meanes with Pharaoh? |
A94301 | 1. Who made you and all the world? |
A94301 | 2. Who shall save you from sinne and hell? |
A94301 | 20. besides, that dulcis amor patriae, how many hazards did they runne into by dangerous and tedious sea- voyages? |
A94301 | 23. should suffer so great a portion of mankind everto remaine in darknesse, and in the shadow of death? |
A94301 | 31. should have no compassion of such an innumerable multitude of soules? |
A94301 | 37. and so they are every where to this day: what more reproachfull obloquy is there among men, then this, Thou art a Jew? |
A94301 | A man before hee knew God had two wives, the first is barren, the second brought forth sweet children, which of these must hee put away? |
A94301 | Againe, If a wise Indian teach good things to other Indians, should not he be as a father or brother to such? |
A94301 | An old Powoow asked, Why we had not taught them to know God sooner? |
A94301 | An old widdow Squaw said, if when men know God, God loves them, why then are any afflicted after they know him? |
A94301 | And what saith a wicked soule when it comes to hell? |
A94301 | And where being now absent from them? |
A94301 | Another said, Suppose two men sin, one knowes it, the other doth not, will God punish both alike? |
A94301 | Being satisfied in this also, they said, How may wee come to serve God? |
A94301 | Can one be saved by reading the booke of the creature? |
A94301 | Doe not Englishmen spoile their soules to say a thing cost them more than it did, and is it not all one as to steale? |
A94301 | Doth God know who shall repent and believe, and who not? |
A94301 | Doth the Devill dwell in us, as we dwell in an house? |
A94301 | Doth the soule in heaven know things done here on earth? |
A94301 | Have no fellowship,& c. They asked what Englishmen thought of him; because he came among the wicked Indians and taught them? |
A94301 | How doth Christ make peace betwixt God and man, what is the meaning of that point? |
A94301 | How far that place from them? |
A94301 | How is all the world become so full of people, being all were once drowned in the floud? |
A94301 | How long is it before men believe that have the word of God made knowne unto them? |
A94301 | How long was Adam good before he sinned? |
A94301 | How many commandements hath God given you to keepe? |
A94301 | How must I waite on God? |
A94301 | How shall I bring my heart to love prayer? |
A94301 | How shall I know when God accepts my prayers? |
A94301 | How the English know God so much, and they so little? |
A94301 | How they might lay hold on him? |
A94301 | How they should know when their faith and prayers bee good? |
A94301 | I see why I must feare hell, and do so every day, but why must I fear God? |
A94301 | If I do that which is a sin, and know it not to be a sin, what will God say to that? |
A94301 | If I reprove a man for sin, and he answer why do you speak thus angerly, Mr. Elliot teacheth us to love one another, is this well? |
A94301 | If I teach on the Sabbath that which you taught us, and forget something, is that a sin? |
A94301 | If a child die before he sin, whither goeth his soule? |
A94301 | If a man know Gods word, but believe it not, and yet teach others, is that good teaching, and if others believe that teaching, is that good believing? |
A94301 | If a man should be inclosed in iron a foot thicke and thrown into the fire, what would become of his soul, would it come forth thence? |
A94301 | If a man will make his daughter marry one she doth not love, what will God say? |
A94301 | If a wife put away her husband because he will pray to God and she will not, what must be done in this case? |
A94301 | If any of them shall goe to heaven, seeing their hearts are so full of sin, especially Nanwunwudsquas, mad after women? |
A94301 | If my wife doth some worke on the night before the Sabbath, and on the Sabbath night also, is it a sin? |
A94301 | If one purpese to pray, and die before that time, wither goeth his soule? |
A94301 | If one that prayes to God sin, like him that prayes not, is not he worse? |
A94301 | If the father be bad, and the child good, will God be offended with that child? |
A94301 | If they did not desire to see God, and if they were not tempted to thinke there was no God, because they could not see him? |
A94301 | If they leave Powawing and pray to God, what shall they doe when they are sicke, having no skill in Physick? |
A94301 | If two families dwell in one house, one prayeth, the other doth not, what shall they that pray do to them that pray not? |
A94301 | If we be made so weake by sinne in our hearts, how can wee come before God and sanctifie a sabbath? |
A94301 | In wicked dreames doth the soule sin? |
A94301 | May such women as pray to God, marry those that do not pray to God? |
A94301 | Nov? |
A94301 | Now the Indians desire to go to heaven, what shall we doe that we may goe thither when we die? |
A94301 | Shall not those poore Natives in New England rise up in judgement against Old England and condemne it? |
A94301 | Shall we call this a day of small things? |
A94301 | The Indians asked Mr. Elliot, if any teach us good things should wee not love him as a father, or a brother? |
A94301 | They demanded, How the English came to differ so much from the Indians in knowledge, seeing at first they had all one father? |
A94301 | To what Nation Iesus Christ came first, and when? |
A94301 | VVhat anger is good, and what is bad? |
A94301 | VVhat is the meaning of the name Hebrews, why doth God say he is the God of the Hebrews? |
A94301 | VVhat meanes that, Blessed are they that mourne? |
A94301 | VVhat meaneth lifting up hands to God? |
A94301 | We have a little sister, and she hath no breasts, what shall we doe for our sister in the day when she shall be spoken for? |
A94301 | What Countreyman Christ was? |
A94301 | What a spirit is? |
A94301 | What doe you remember of that spoken to you the last time wee were here? |
A94301 | What force of wicked men is lawfull, and what not? |
A94301 | What if a Minister weare long haire, as some other men do, what will God say? |
A94301 | What is faith? |
A94301 | What is the meaning of the word Humiliation, so often heard of by them in our Churches? |
A94301 | What is true repentance, and how shall I know when it is true? |
A94301 | What should I pray for at night, what at morning, and what on the Sabbath day? |
A94301 | When God saith honour thy Father and thy Mother, doth he meane three Fathers, our Father, our Sachim, and God? |
A94301 | When I pray for a soft heart, why is it still hard? |
A94301 | When a soule goes to heaven what doth it say? |
A94301 | When my heart prayeth with my husband praying, is this praying to God aright? |
A94301 | When such die as never heard of Christ, whither do they go? |
A94301 | Where Christ was now? |
A94301 | Whether is faith set in my heart or in my minde? |
A94301 | Whether their children goe when they die, because they have not sinned? |
A94301 | Whether they should believe dreames? |
A94301 | Why did Christ die in our steads? |
A94301 | Why did not God give all men good hearts? |
A94301 | Why did not God having all power, kill the devill, that made all men so bad? |
A94301 | Why doth God punish in hell for ever, man doth not so, but after a time lets out of prison againe? |
A94301 | Why doth God so hate them that teach others to commit sinne? |
A94301 | Why have not beasts a soule as well as man, seeing they have love, anger,& c. as man hath? |
A94301 | Why must we love our enemies, and how shall we do it? |
A94301 | Why some so bad that they hate those that would teach them? |
A94301 | all the light thereof quite extinguished? |
A94301 | and how can there be an image of God, seeing it is forbiden in the second Commandement? |
A94301 | and not so much as the least glimpse thereof remaine? |
A94301 | and their fifth, If the water be higher then the earth, why did it not overflow it? |
A94301 | and what soule is not grieved for the great divisions of England? |
A94301 | another demanded, if English men were once so ignorant of Christ as themselves? |
A94301 | for t is said in the second commandement, hee will visit the sinnes of the fathers upon the children? |
A94301 | how doe you cast them into prison, and fetters, that are not able to pay their debts? |
A94301 | how were they affrighted when the feare of Spanish cruelties provoked fathers, mothers, children, to hang themselves together? |
A94301 | if the former, they offended God, if the latter, they illegitimate their owne deare children? |
A94301 | is it credible there should be no records thereof in the Annalls of any Nation? |
A94301 | is it likely they should be so tenacious in a farre and forraigne land, that never kept them in their owne, as the next words expresse? |
A94301 | spe? |
A94301 | this being indeed so large a portion of it; how have they bin scattered into all the four windes, if one of the foure did never blow upon them? |
A94301 | which being answered, their fourth question was, Why the sea water was salt, and the land water fresh? |
A94301 | who bewailes not to see the breakings of the sheepfold? |
A94301 | who mournes not to heare the strange bleeting of the flocks? |
A94301 | why then did God use so much meanes with Pharaoh? |
A39228 | ARe you well this morning? |
A39228 | Again, who provideth water, and watereth the Corn? |
A39228 | Ah what a fool have I been? |
A39228 | Alas, we can not Pray, nor Reade, how shall we keep a Sabbath? |
A39228 | All these wonderful works God doth, in t ● ● matter of feeding us; and therefore is it not good reason w ● should then pray to him? |
A39228 | An ● what though God doth chastise his people for th ● sins? |
A39228 | And I pray Cousin how doth your Wife, my loving Kinswoman, is she yet living? |
A39228 | And further, are you willing to learn meekness of Jesus Christ? |
A39228 | And what pleasure have you in those wayes? |
A39228 | And who but God can make our bodies to grow to such an appointe ● stature, and then to grow no more? |
A39228 | And who but God can pr ● ● serve our health, and turn away sicknesses? |
A39228 | And will not you suffer your people to learn this good way, when God offereth it unto us? |
A39228 | And yet I see that I have no such thing to give in ransome for my Soul; or had I such a thing to give, would it be accepted? |
A39228 | But I pray Cousin whose house is that before us, where I see so many going in and out, and standing about in every place? |
A39228 | But how can that be? |
A39228 | But how do you know all this? |
A39228 | But how shall I know that you s ● y true? |
A39228 | But let the worst of your fears come to pass, suppose all your Subjects that hate praying to God should leave you, what s ● ● ll you lose by it? |
A39228 | But moreover and besides my own personal sins, other mens sins I am guilty of; Oh how many have sinned upon my account, many wayes? |
A39228 | But still I am in the dark about my self, how shall I be inter ● sted in this Redemption wrought by Jesus Christ? |
A39228 | But then divine Justice taketh the cause in hand; Why gaddest thou about to seek so many shifts? |
A39228 | But what are those outward distresses which do so a ● ● ● ict you? |
A39228 | But what got he at l ● st by adhering to the worst sort of his Subjects? |
A39228 | But what is the effect of your prayers? |
A39228 | But what noise is this that I hear? |
A39228 | But why do you say that we feed upon trash, st ● ● meat and poison? |
A39228 | But why say I all? |
A39228 | Can any of your gods give Rain, or rule the Clouds? |
A39228 | Can man, or any Creature for him, satisfie the Justice of the Law of God? |
A39228 | Cousin, had you not a great Thunder and Lightni ● ● to day as you came, and were you not afraid? |
A39228 | Did your Gods make this World? |
A39228 | Do all you praying Indians thus do when you are weary and tired with labour, or travel, or hunting,& c. do you pray before you go to rest? |
A39228 | Doth no body see these base doings of these Ministers? |
A39228 | God is just and holy, and how can it stand with his holy Justice to pardon a vile sinner, without satisfaction to his holy Justice? |
A39228 | HO, well met friend: how far travel you this way? |
A39228 | Have you any further Counsel to give me? |
A39228 | How do you know what was done so many thousand years ago? |
A39228 | Husband, what do you mean to withhold our Friend from ● e ● t so long, so l ● te? |
A39228 | I acknowledge wh ● t you say: but I pray what is that wherein you desire we might agree? |
A39228 | I have been a means of their damnation, Oh how many are gone, and going to hell upon my account? |
A39228 | I perceive also that in your worshipping of God morning and night, you reade in that Book: I pray tell me what Book that is ▪ what is written in it? |
A39228 | I pray tell me why you are so careful to pray unto God before and after meat? |
A39228 | I pray tell me, what is my duty in that respe ● ● to pray for others? |
A39228 | I wonder at m ● self: where have I been? |
A39228 | I wonder at these things; Can you satisfie me in the reason hereof? |
A39228 | If a great Sachem in a far Country should send unto you a writing, wherein he giveth you wise Counsel, would you not reade it? |
A39228 | If our Souls be living Souls, what do they feed upon? |
A39228 | If your praying to God do indeed teach you the true way of being rich, as you say, how then cometh it to pass that you are so poor still? |
A39228 | Is there no Balm in G ● lead? |
A39228 | Lord, how long wilt thou look on? |
A39228 | My question therefore is, How 〈 ◊ 〉 comport with the present affairs, and state of things? |
A39228 | Now I ask you, Are you weary and heavy laden with your sins? |
A39228 | Now my Kinsmen and Friends let us discourse a little about the Question propounded, Why we pray unto God before and after Meat? |
A39228 | Now what acts of life doth this babe perform? |
A39228 | Oh I am pained at my heart, what sh ● ll I do? |
A39228 | Oh how welcome will you be unto the Lord? |
A39228 | Oh what shall I do? |
A39228 | Oh what shall I do? |
A39228 | Oh wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me? |
A39228 | Reade the 40 Chapter of Isaiah, begin at the 12 verse, and reade unto the 27. Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand? |
A39228 | Some s ● eak of very many English people killed wi ● ● Thunder, and many burnt in their houses: is it so indeed? |
A39228 | Still I am more and more confounded: who is able to deliver a wretched rebellious worm out of his Almighty hand? |
A39228 | The Question is, What is the Word of God? |
A39228 | There is but one thing more that I am to speak to, viz, the second part of your question, What we have gained and got by praying to God? |
A39228 | These Rocks and hills about us, why fall they not upon me and break me into dust and powder, and send me away unto perdition? |
A39228 | This puts me into another great difficulty: can I penitently turn from sin, and believe in Jesus Christ? |
A39228 | VVe can not tell, we do not yet understand the matter, how then should we answer to it? |
A39228 | VVhat further Counsel do you ● i ve me? |
A39228 | We and our Forefathers have through all generations lived in our Religion, which I desire not to change; Are we wiser then our Forefathers? |
A39228 | We see with our eyes, and know certainly that the body dieth, and turneth to rottenness and dust, and why may not the Soul d ● so likewise? |
A39228 | Well; therefore you are now converted from your sins: and who wrought this great Change in you? |
A39228 | Wh ● t if some of Gods childre ● should in this point be conformed to Jesus Christ? |
A39228 | What Book is that you reade in? |
A39228 | What News do the Ships bring from beyond Sea? |
A39228 | What do you mean by Scriptures? |
A39228 | What further Counsel will you give me? |
A39228 | What say you m ● friends? |
A39228 | What say you my friends? |
A39228 | What say you, my friends, to this l ● st mo ● ● on of theirs? |
A39228 | What ● inite creature can out- sin infinite satisfaction? |
A39228 | Wherewith sha ● ● I come before the Lord, and bowe my self before the high God? |
A39228 | Wherewith shall I come before the Lord, and bowe my self before the high God? |
A39228 | Who but God can do this? |
A39228 | Who but God can do this? |
A39228 | Who but God can do this? |
A39228 | Who can oppose or gainsay the mountainous weight of these Arguments? |
A39228 | Why trimmest thou thy way to seek love? |
A39228 | Why ● hen is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered? |
A39228 | Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten th ● usands of rivers of oyl? |
A39228 | Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten thousands of r ● vers of oyl? |
A39228 | Will ye rob God? |
A39228 | Will you go with me unto them, and see what they do? |
A39228 | Would you not lye down now you have eaten, and take so ● e rest after your long journey? |
A39228 | Yea, that I can freely yield unto, that God himself can do it; what can not he do? |
A39228 | You say right: why trouble they us in our pleasures and delights? |
A39228 | You speak much of Jesus Christ, and his pardoning our sins, and saving our Souls; who is this Jesus Christ? |
A39228 | and how do you know that it is the Word of God? |
A39228 | and is she not yet weary of your new way of praying to God? |
A39228 | and whall s ● all we do? |
A39228 | and who can give every part of our body its due proportion, that one part sh ● ll not overgrow the other, but every part alike? |
A39228 | and why do they not Command their people to Print the Bible, and let it be free for any man that will buy them, and reade them? |
A39228 | and why do you call it The Word of God? |
A39228 | and would you not suffer your people to learn wisdome, but continue in their ignorance and blindness? |
A39228 | are these the men th ● t manage their Religion? |
A39228 | but will the offend ● d just and holy God p ● cifie himself for my offences, and pardon so great a sinner as I? |
A39228 | can they quench hell fire? |
A39228 | do you love darkness better then light? |
A39228 | doth not your weary journey l ● e in your bones? |
A39228 | for when Springs and Rivers are dried up, what can me ● do, but cry to God? |
A39228 | have you slept well this night? |
A39228 | how many of these wicked Ministers be there, that they are so potent? |
A39228 | how shall I bring the matter about, to bring about my people to pray to God? |
A39228 | how shall I escape damnation, who have led so many in ● o that eternal pit? |
A39228 | is it no ● God? |
A39228 | is not the skin of your feet that was worn thin with rocks and rough wayes, still tender? |
A39228 | is there no Physician there? |
A39228 | my Relations, my Friends, my Neighbou ● ● and for all? |
A39228 | nay, will they not rather be oyle unto those flames? |
A39228 | or will you choose your old courses and companions, and perish for ever? |
A39228 | shall I come before him with bur ● ● offerings with calves of a year old? |
A39228 | shall I come before him with burnt offerings, with calves of a year old? |
A39228 | shall I give my first born for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? |
A39228 | shall I give ● y first born for my transgression, the fruit of my bo ● y for the sin of ● y soul? |
A39228 | the Heavens, the Sun, the Moon, the Stars, the Clouds, the Seas, and the whole Earth? |
A39228 | there are not many, that I hear of, tha ● pray unto God; and you that do pray unto God, what do you get by it? |
A39228 | we having neither the word of God ● or praye ●? |
A39228 | what are these tears of mine? |
A39228 | what grea ● Houses have you built? |
A39228 | what have I done? |
A39228 | what is the reason of your so doing? |
A39228 | where be you ● flocks and herds of Cattel? |
A39228 | where be your Clothes? |
A39228 | where be your fields of Corn, Barns an ● Orchards? |
A39228 | where shall I hide my self from his eye? |
A39228 | wherein are you be ● tered by your praying to God? |
A39228 | wherein doth our food differ from yours, and wherein do you in that respect excel us? |
A39228 | will God regard these complaints of mine? |
A39228 | will praying to God fill you with food, gladness, and garments? |
A39228 | will the holy God cease to be just? |
A39228 | will ● e abrogate and disanul his holy Law, which I have so often, so deeply, so rebelliously broken? |
A39228 | would you not hear what he saith? |
A39228 | you hear what these people desire, will you tarry the Sabbath among us, and teach publickly amongst my people? |
A39228 | 〈 ◊ 〉 you are at your choice, will you forsake those bad course ● companions, and live in glory? |